--SHE TRIED HARD TO HELP ME, SHE PUT ME AT EASE. SHE LOVED ME SO NAUGHTY, MADE ME WEAK IN THE
KNEES
…As you know, I
was in Portland/Vancouver for the weekend.
It was both fun and magical.
Tomorrow morning, barring my spinning out on sheets of roadway ice, I’ll
head to the airport and then to Washington, D.C. for a writers conference along
with 10,000 other writers, about 1,000 of who I’ll actually know. Sometimes it seems like all I do is screw
around.
…I hope you
have a great week, that you are safe and warm.
I’ll be back here on Monday.
…I’m not sure
what I’m going to read, but I’m pretty sure it’ll be this, a story that took 1st
place in the Flash Fire Fiction Category (winning $100, hey it’s something,
better than a bruised rib) and is the closest I come to writing a happy ending:
Waterbed
When
the fire burned down our garage my sister could only ask about the
waterbed. “You can’t burn a waterbed,
can you?” she asked, her goggle eyes big as pucks.
She
was mine alone to love, like a strange painting or the neighbor’s lonesome
cat. Our father was always away and our
mother, well, she didn’t care for retards.
The
man who interviewed me didn’t work for the fire department and I could tell he
thought I was the culprit because he charged forth in hot pursuit of a motive. I could have given him plenty.
The
smell of a fire gets on something; it bores in and can’t ever really be removed. Rank skunk spray you can get rid of, but
fire, it smolders in the fabric forever.
Jeanie
was sis’s name but we changed it up, always with the letter J though: Jezebel,
Janine, Jacqui, Junebug. She rather
enjoyed the idea that she could become so many different people so easily.
When
my mother was at Mr. Taylor’s house comparing bird watching stories, Jeanie
liked nothing more than to sneak up to my parent’s bedroom and flop about on
the waterbed. She became a mermaid on
that thing, so happy. A queen being
ferried betwixt regal landscapes. A
damsel on a raft. A silly girl, not so
smart, who at least knew how to swim.
When
our parents divorced the first thing to go besides Pop was that waterbed. Mother stabbed it to death with an ice pick
and later the carpet man spent the better part of a day fixing things, flooring-wise. He even carried the rubber matt out to the
garage like some defeated sea creature slung over his shoulders.
I
buried it and it’s in a safe place now.
Jeanie and I step over it every morning on our way to school, me to mine
and Jeanie to her special one. I tell
her someday she’ll swim again and, as she smiles, I think she believes me.
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